Everyone has an opinion.
It’s the quarterback. It’s the offensive coordinator. It’s the playcalling. It’s the plays themselves. It’s the head coach. It’s the running back. It’s the offensive line. It’s the run game coordinator. It’s the wind. It’s early December and no one has even begun Christmas shopping yet.
Spend any time online to partake in Eagles discourse and you’ll see a myriad of opinions on what’s gone wrong with the offense in 2025. No matter your opinion, you’re going to get yelled at by somebody.
You’re wrong. Or, you’re right. It depends on the X account you engage with.
The clearest answer as to what’s wrong with the Eagles offense is… all of it. There are no wrong answers. All we’re trying to do is assign the proper amount of blame so that we can come up with some kind of plan to fix it. The fact there are so many culprits makes it difficult to come up with an easy solution.
Here is my list of what’s officially to blame for the malaise, with their percentage of the blame in parenthesis. You, of course, will totally agree with all of this.
Nick Sirianni (35%)
Nick Sirianni has had one of the most bizarre head coaching careers in NFL history. Is there a more maligned head coach in NFL history who has gone to two Super Bowls in three seasons, never missed the playoffs and has one of the best winning percentages of all time? It seems ridiculous on its face to criticize someone who’s helped establish a potential NFL dynasty, but one must also remember Sirianni also oversaw one of the most galling in-season collapses of all-time and is in danger of watching a second one here in ‘25.
It’s easy for fans to look at Sirianni’s offensive philosophy and wonder what it is he thinks will change by continuing down the same path. When one considers he doesn’t call plays, has little input on Vic Fangio’s defense and
can’t seem to articulate why something like pre-snap motion could be beneficial, it really makes one wonder if Sirianni has been the driving force behind the success of the last four years or simply along for the ride.
Do the Eagles practice?
— Bill Simmons (@BillSimmons)
November 28, 2025
Sirianni’s approach at the end of the first half in which they ran out the clock to the 2-minute warning came because he was terrified of leaving too much time on the clock for the inevitable three-and-out that inevitably followed. His decision was instructive, as have been his repeated 3rd-and-long coward draws and screens that demonstrated absolute no confidence in the very offense he has designed and implemented on a weekly basis.
What does it say about your ability as a head coach if you don’t have any confidence in your own creation?
And ask yourself, if Ben Johnson were running the Eagles’ offense, how would it look?
Read this Vic Fangio quote on Ben Johnson, and ask if opposing coaches can say the following about the Eagles with sincerity: “It’s a great scheme. They do a great job calling the game, mixing it up, marrying their run game and their pass game. They’re highly ranked in a lot of…
— Zach Berman (@ZBerm)
November 28, 2025
I don’t know if this falls into the Sirianni or Patullo bucket, but maybe they can share this particular failure.
Asked Dallas Goedert if the
#Eagles' offensive game plan was to exploit a Bears defense that allowed a near-NFL-high 6.5 catches a game to tight ends and was down three starting linebackers.
"I didn't know that [about the Bears vs. TEs]. There were opportunities. Could have had…
— Jeff McLane (@Jeff_McLane)
November 29, 2025
Kevin Patullo (20%)
I honestly don’t know how much of the Eagles’ issues lie at the feet of Patullo and how much of it is him being overmatched. In ‘23, Brian Johnson appeared to have the same issues Patullo is having, and it’s fair to wonder if Patullo is being handcuffed by what his boss and quarterback want to do in a similar way to Johnson. It’s also fair to note that Kellen Moore was an experienced playcaller and was able to navigate Sirianni and Hurts better than Patullo has.
We’ve been screaming at Patullo for using nothing but hitches, curls and go-routes, with almost nothing happening in the middle of the field. We’ve ripped him for offensive gameplans that opposing defenses have all but said were predictable and easy to defend.
.
@CutonDime25 asks Chauncey Gardner if the Eagles' (his former team) offense was predictable in the Bears' 24-15 victory
His Answer….
WE ARE LIVE IN THE SPEAKEASY RIGHT NOW DISCUSSING CHIEFS' PLAYOFF HOPES
https://t.co/oLWntMKz2b pic.twitter.com/Pf8T3f5OOA
— Speakeasy (@speakeasytlkshw)
November 28, 2025
While the majority of the blame lies at the feat of Sirianni, Patullo also isn’t bringing anything new to the table. Everything is stale, everything is predictable, and when they do try something different, such as putting Barkley and Tank Bigsby in the backfield at the same time…
What is this?
pic.twitter.com/ALwZMvKAG4
— PHLY Sports (@PHLY_Sports)
November 28, 2025
…it looks like something he drew up in a bathroom stall at halftime and tried to throw into the gameplan on the fly. He continues to use players incorrectly…
Grant Calcaterra blocking a DE 1-on-1. Don’t care if it’s on the backside, make it stop.
pic.twitter.com/tAGQFLfisr
— Jeff McLane (@Jeff_McLane)
November 29, 2025
Grant Calcaterra was on the field for 12 offensive snaps against the Bears. 10 of the 12 were run plays. Excluding a QB sneak from the run plays, the Eagles ran away from him on 10 of 11 run plays. The Bears' DL was slanting so hard to the opposite direction, knowing the Eagles…
— Shane Haff (@ShaneHaffNFL)
December 1, 2025
…and there’s no ingenuity in anything they’re doing whatsoever. He’s shown an inability to find a way to utilize the talent at his disposal. Just look at the kind of stuff Shane Steichen is doing with the Colts.
It is the responsibility of the coaching staff to force changes on players if they don’t want them, and it is their responsibility, not the QB or anyone else, to put together a gameplan that will move the ball and score points. I don’t know if a change in play-caller is going to work, but I do know it won’t hurt, and it’s time to make the call.
Jalen Hurts (20%)
Assessing blame on Hurts is difficult to quantify. His detractors unfairly malign him at times which forces his supporters to vociferously support him and ignore any negatives he’s bringing to the table. But if you have eyes, you can see that Hurts is not playing well right now. He’s missing open receivers and leaving a lot of meat on the bone on the field. It’s not the first time he’s done this. He’s the NFL equivalent to a streaky power hitter, like a Bryce Harper or Kyle Schwarber. He can carry an offense when he’s hot, but when he’s off, it’s an offensive killer.
Numerous reports have indicated Hurts prefers to run a more vanilla offense, that he doesn’t like a lot of pre-snap motion and traffic over the middle of the field. If true, that limits what kinds of plays Patullo can even call.
Jimmy Kempski also noted in his post-game column that Hurts hasn’t wanted to run the football as much this season, further neutering the run game and overall offensive explosiveness and efficiency.
I watched Ben Johnson use Caleb Williams’ legs almost exactly how Jalen Hurts’ legs were used last year with KM
yet we’re rarely seeing it this year
we’ve neutered one of the better parts of Hurts’ game, so let’s add that to the list of coaching incompetencies.
— | myke |

(@PhillyTruthr)
November 29, 2025
After Week 13, the Eagles have now utilized Jalen Hurts on non-tush push designed runs on just 19 plays this season.
Hurts has gained 129 rushing yards on those 19 plays (6.8 YPC).
The lack of utilizing Hurts as a runner more often is absolutely coaching malpractice.
pic.twitter.com/7x6mwYQRnG
— Anthony DiBona (@DiBonaNFL)
November 29, 2025
Against Chicago, as Brian Baldinger outlined, Hurts did not see the field well at all.
.
@ChicagoBears @Eagles this offense is offensive in so many ways; but in this "copy cat league" expect more teams to go "Blitz Zero" playing a Shell Coverage behind it.
#BaldysBreakdowns pic.twitter.com/v39cuzB3BT
— Brian Baldinger (@BaldyNFL)
November 29, 2025
Now, others have noted that the first play in which he ignored Dallas Goedert running wide open in the middle of the field wasn’t Hurts’ fault, that the play needed to go on the hot read to Smith with an all-out blitz on, but the miscommunication resulted in the throw sailing behind his wide receiver. That said, Hurts was simply not good and more needs to be done to open up more of the field.
Watched the Eagles' Offense this morning, and it's incredibly clear to me that they started attacking the intermediate middle of the field when chasing the game.
Vs. the Bears, Hurts was 4/5 for 64 yards.
This ENTIRE season he's 14/21 for 250 yards 1 TD, 0 INT.
I've seen…
— Jonny Page (@JonnyPage9)
November 30, 2025
In order for this offense to work, Hurts needs to run the football, he needs to accept a more varied route tree, he needs to throw the ball where it’s designed to go, show patience in the pocket, and throw across the middle. He’s done it all before, and he’s done it at an elite level.
And not for nothin’, but if you’re going to give Hurts the ultimate say in the formations you’re using, the routes being run and whether or not he runs the ball, then just let him call the plays. It’ll make things a lot less confusing for everyone.
Offensive Line (15%)
The O-line just isn’t what it has been in the past. Lane Johnson has been in and out all season and is out for another few weeks. Tyler Steen has not adequately replaced what Mekhi Becton gave them in the run game a year ago. Cam Jurgens and Landon Dickerson have been playing through injury, and I don’t know what is going on with Jordan Mailata in the run game. As this excellent thread details, last year’s offensive line was far more mobile and athletic in the run game, and it made all the difference in the world.
Last season, Saquon Barkley had 1,050 of his 2,005 rushing yards come from shotgun, and a good portion of his long runs were just inside zone attempts. Offensive line did a better job last year working double teams to the second level and getting displacement.
pic.twitter.com/N6W60Rum9L
— Devin Jackson (@RealD_Jackson)
November 27, 2025
We’ve always been able to rely on Jeff Stoutland to save the passing offense when needed, but that lever has not been there this season.
I mean, just look at this play.
– Fred tackles Steen and both end up on ground
– Jurgens overruns LB
– Dickerson gets shed very easily
– Mailata and DE double Team Goedert
Mona Lisa of awful OL play
pic.twitter.com/Ah5bMLsfUw
—

8-4 (@PhillyNick100)
November 29, 2025
The Eagles employ an offensive coordinator, a running game coordinator, and a passing game coordinator, and it’s clear nothing is coordinated. The interior of the line has been particularly bad.
Pressures allowed among all guards this season:
Tyler Steen: 27 (4th most)
Landon Dickerson: 24 (9th most)
For the "Eagles still have an elite offensive line" crowd. Constant pressure from the interior is killing this offense.
— Brenden Deeg (@BrendenDeeg_)
December 1, 2025
And can we please stop thinking that adding
more tight ends to the running scheme is going to work?
Eagles TE Grant Calcaterra played 12 snaps against the Bears in Week 13.
He was a run blocker on 10 of those 12 snaps.
Calcaterra has offered nothing as a blocker, yet he was asked to block on 83.3% of his snaps.
pic.twitter.com/jHhOXM43Mm
— Anthony DiBona (@DiBonaNFL)
November 30, 2025
I’m not sure how this gets fixed, other than going with a ton of 12 and 21 personnel and trying some different stuff, asking less of the offensive line and creating more space. Jeff Stoutland is an outstanding coach, but he needs to do better, too.
Saquon Barkley (5%)
Last year, Barkley averaged 125.3 yard per game. This year, it’s 61.7, the lowest since 2021 with the Giants (45.6). His 3.7 yards per average is also tied for the lowest of his career (2021). Physically, he looks like the same player, but it’s fair to wonder if a season of slamming into the backs of his offensive linemen or on-rushing linebackers at the line of scrimmage is beginning to take its toll.
For most of the season, the offensive line and playcalling were holding him back, but last week, Barkley missed some obvious running lanes and appears to be just a bit off. It’s not earth-shattering stuff, and if the offensive line gets its act together, I anticipate big runs from Saquon. But he’s not without some blame here.
Bad Luck/Stuff Out of Their Control (5%)
A.J. Brown gets called for a ticky-tack offensive pass interference call. Saquon fumbles for the first time all year at a critical juncture in Dallas. Jalen has the ball stripped on the Tush Push, of all things, although in my view, the play should have been called dead when forward progress was stopped.
Momentum fully stopped.
Should have been called dead for forward progress but just another example of this play being challenging for the officials.
pic.twitter.com/lF5q8KZkGB https://t.co/0qbu7qKDoJ
— That Hurts (@That_Hurts)
November 28, 2025
Windy conditions. Slippery fields. Sometimes, when things aren’t going your way, the avalanche consumes you.
The Eagles were hit for 14 penalties in Dallas and have been the victims of some questionable referee decisions the last two weeks.
Just a defensive pass interference, an offensive pass interference and a no-call. You’ll never guess which is which
The refs have been absolutely screwing the Eagles
pic.twitter.com/xoTRazPAi5
— Josh (@supply_side_acc)
November 29, 2025
Now, they also benefitted from a questionable defensive holding call that iced their victory over the Lions three weeks ago, and these things tend to balance out over the course of a long season. That said, right now, the little things aren’t going their way, either.
It’s hard to fathom, but the offense has actually regressed since the bye four weeks ago. What had been an inconsistent worry has turned into full-on panic, and there is real fear the 2025 season is slipping away in the same fashion the 2023 season did. Even though he won a Super Bowl just a season ago, I don’t know if Sirianni could survive two epic collapses in three seasons.
That said, there is still time for things to reverse themselves. If Sirianni, Hurts and Patullo can get out of their own way and actually make real changes to the gameplan, this team can go on a run. But right now, it feels virtually impossible to imagine.